Molecular profiling reveals primary mesothelioma cell lines recapitulate human disease

Chernova, T. et al. (2016) Molecular profiling reveals primary mesothelioma cell lines recapitulate human disease. Cell Death and Differentiation, 23(7), pp. 1152-1164. (doi: 10.1038/cdd.2015.165) (PMID:26891694) (PMCID:PMC4946883)

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Abstract

Malignant mesothelioma (MM) is an aggressive, fatal tumor strongly associated with asbestos exposure. There is an urgent need to improve MM patient outcomes and this requires functionally validated pre-clinical models. Mesothelioma-derived cell lines provide an essential and relatively robust tool and remain among the most widely used systems for candidate drug evaluation. Although a number of cell lines are commercially available, a detailed comparison of these commercial lines with freshly derived primary tumor cells to validate their suitability as pre-clinical models is lacking. To address this, patient-derived primary mesothelioma cell lines were established and characterized using complementary multidisciplinary approaches and bioinformatic analysis. Clinical markers of mesothelioma, transcriptional and metabolic profiles, as well as the status of p53 and the tumor suppressor genes CDKN2A and NF2, were examined in primary cell lines and in two widely used commercial lines. Expression of MM-associated markers, as well as the status of CDKN2A, NF2, the ‘gatekeeper’ in MM development, and their products demonstrated that primary cell lines are more representative of the tumor close to its native state and show a degree of molecular diversity, thus capturing the disease heterogeneity in a patient cohort. Molecular profiling revealed a significantly different transcriptome and marked metabolic shift towards a greater glycolytic phenotype in commercial compared with primary cell lines. Our results highlight that multiple, appropriately characterised, patient-derived tumor cell lines are required to enable concurrent evaluation of molecular profiles versus drug response. Furthermore, application of this approach to other difficult-to-treat tumors would generate improved cellular models for pre-clinical evaluation of novel targeted therapies.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Bushell, Professor Martin
Authors: Chernova, T., Sun, X. M., Powley, I. R., Galavotti, S., Grosso, S., Murphy, F. A., Miles, G. J., Cresswell, L., Antonov, A. V., Bennett, J., Nakas, A., Dinsdale, D., Cain, K., Bushell, M., Willis, A. E., and MacFarlane, M.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cancer Sciences
Journal Name:Cell Death and Differentiation
Publisher:Nature Publishing Group
ISSN:1350-9047
ISSN (Online):1476-5403
Published Online:19 February 2016
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2016 Macmillan Publishers Limited
First Published:First published in Cell Death and Differentiation 23(7): 1152-1164
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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